This is an async implementation of Mediator pattern with pipline behaviors.
It is a port of Mediatr from .Net C#
Requirements:
- Python >= 3.6
install mediatr:
pip install mediatr
class GetArrayQuery():
def __init__(self,items_count:int):
self.items_count = items_count
from mediatr import Mediator
@Mediator.handler
async def get_array_handler(request:GetArrayQuery):
items = list()
for i in range(0, request.items_count):
items.append(i)
return items
# or just Mediator.register_handler(get_array_handler)
or class:
@Mediator.handler
class GetArrayQueryHandler():
def handle(self,request:GetArrayQuery):
items = list()
for i in range(0, request.items_count):
items.append(i)
return items
# or just Mediator.register_handler(GetArrayQueryHandler)
from mediatr import Mediator
mediator = Mediator()
request = GetArrayQuery(5)
result = await mediator.send_async(request)
# result = mediator.send(request) in synchronous mode
print(result) // [0,1,2,3,4]
If you are using synchronous
mediator.send(request)
method, try to define synchronous handlers and behaviorsIn another case use
asyncio
module for manual manage of event loop in synchronous code
from mediatr import Mediator
request = GetArrayQuery(5)
result = await Mediator.send_async(request)
# or:
result = Mediator.send(request) #in synchronous mode. Async handlers and behaviors will not blocking!
print(result) // [0,1,2,3,4]
Note that instantiation of Mediator(handler_class_manager = my_manager_func)
is useful if you have custom handlers creation. For example using an injector.
By default class handlers are instantiated with simple init: SomeRequestHandler()
. handlers or behaviors as functions are executed directly.
You can define behavior class with method 'handle' or function:
@Mediator.behavior
async def get_array_query_behavior(request:GetArrayQuery, next): #behavior only for GetArrayQuery or derived classes
array1 = await next()
array1.append(5)
return array1
@Mediator.behavior
def common_behavior(request:object, next): #behavior for all requests because issubclass(GetArrayQuery,object)==True
request.timestamp = '123'
return next()
# ...
mediator = Mediator()
request = GetArrayQuery(5)
result = await mediator.send_async(request)
print(result) // [0,1,2,3,4,5]
print(request.timestamp) // '123'
If your handlers or behaviors registered as functions, it just executes them.
In case with handlers or behaviors, declared as classes with method handle
Mediator uses function, that instantiates handlers or behaviors:
def default_handler_class_manager(HandlerCls:type,is_behavior:bool=False):
return HandlerCls()
For example, if you want to instantiate them with dependency injector or custom, pass your own factory function to Mediator:
def my_class_handler_manager(handler_class, is_behavior=False):
if is_behavior:
# custom logic
pass
return injector.get(handler_class)
mediator = Mediator(handler_class_manager=my_class_handler_manager)
PS:
The next
function in behavior is async
, so if you want to take results or if your behavior is async, use middle_results = await next()
Handler may be async too, if you need.
from mediatr import Mediator, GenericQuery
class UserModel(BaseModel): # For example sqlalchemy ORM entity
id = Column(String,primary_key=True)
name = Column(String)
class FetchUserQuery(GenericQuery[UserModel])
def __init__(self,user_id:str):
self.user_id = user_id
mediator = Mediator()
request = FetchUserQuery(user_id = "123456")
user = mediator.send(request) # type of response will be a UserModel
# -------------------------------------------------------------
@Mediator.handler
class FetchUserQueryHandler():
def handle(self, request:FetchUserQuery):
db_session = Session() #sqlalchemy session
return db_session.query(UserModel).filter(UserModel.id == request.user_id).one()
# or handler as simple function:
@Mediator.handler
def fetch_user_query_handler(request:FetchUserQuery):
db_session = Session() #sqlalchemy session
return db_session.query(UserModel).filter(UserModel.id == request.user_id).one()
Please give a star if the library is useful for you 😃